Classifieds: 607-4497

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Classifieds: 607-4497

opinion
Perspective
A Different Look at Colombia
BY RICHARD McCOLL
PRESIDENCIA DE LA REPÚBLICA
T
he Presidential hopefuls
have yet to be announced
but there is little question
of who they will be and what they
plan on doing. All campaigning for
the top spot – as is the practice - will
be based entirely on talk of how to
resolve “the conflict” and little else,
but from a militaristic standpoint
and not as a unifying and nationally
inclusive opportunity to provide Colombia with a possibility to present a
socially aware and altruistic identity
to the world.
I for one wish President Juan
Manuel Santos well. Whatever fragile accord he succeeds in signing
with FARC will not guarantee him
reelection in 2014, and this worthy
diplomat, who has performed the
admirable role of pitching a “new
Colombia” to the world, would do
well to take on the reins of academia
and strut unworriedly through the
wide tree-lined avenues of Knightsbridge or Georgetown between lectures rather than remaining in Rosales. Aloof and self-congratulatory,
this technocrat to the Colombian
elite will end his tenure as he began,
with lofty ideals aplenty and careful
declarations on hand, but remaining
blatantly out of touch with the nation
he governed.
President Santos will not step
aside in the vainglorious manner
of Andrés Pastrana and neither will
he pick a bar fight with his heir and
suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous misfortune such as those
inflicted by Álvaro Uribe. For Santos, there will be almost too much to
choose from as he settles down into
a high-backed leather armchair, dons
slippers fashioned in China and not
Nariño and composes his memoirs
on the “Colombian Third Way”. I’ll
purchase the pirated version on the
Calle 16 downtown.
Predictably, and it requires no
stretch of the imagination to envisage a
right of center candidate assuming power
and taking up residence in the Palacio de
Nariño after the next elections. I get the
feeling that rural Colombia yearns for a
strong hand once again, preferring actions and direct speech to international
travel and policies of half measures and
proving once again that the divisions between urban Colombia and the countryside are more marked than ever before.
The same factors that tether together
our fragile nation state and that created
the foundations for la Violencia of 194666 are still in play here in twenty first century Colombia. There is little difference
– if only in name alone – between the
hegemonic periods of political and economic exclusion and influence exercised
by the liberals and conservatives in a tit
for tat practice and what we, as foreigners,
can observe here nowadays. Colombian
society remains controlled by elites with
an identity based on loose assumptions
of a bygone colonial era placing an importance only on race, color and creed.
What Colombia will President Santos’ heir inherit? For fear of being branded a centralist and capitalino, I’ll not
speak of the urgent need to upgrade Bo-
gotá and present our capital as a viable
city to visit and in which to do business.
Colombia is a vast nation and too much
of her is overlooked.
Much is made of innovation and
trade and this must be garlanded, praised
and promoted as an alternative vision of
a modern Colombia. I for one celebrate
the strength of the regionalism of the
paisas in succeeding in mobilizing their
diaspora to cast in their online vote and
ensure Medellín won the title of the
World’s Most Innovative City.
But while we are only one year away
from elections the country appears to be
reacting laconically with the telltale signs
of having seen or heard it all before. Conflicts in general come about from some
sort of exclusion, be it ethnic, religious,
economic or political and here in Colombia we appear to be experiencing a
frustrated yet cognizant social revolution.
Where will it lead?
Will we be presented with a new vision for Colombia in 2014? Or will we
continue to be governed by a ruling elite
intent on denying the existence of a Colombia beyond the urban areas? Will we
be donning ruanas once again in support
of Colombia’s campesinos and then re-
treating to Juan Valdez or Starbucks?
I read an article recently debating the viability of presidential candidates in the forthcoming elections in
Costa Rica. It seemed that one of the
key issues was to establish how much
any of the candidates had in common
with the average Tico. A question was
placed: “How much does a liter of milk
cost?” There was ducking, diving and
full on evasion. Not one potential president was able to provide an answer.
Given the trivialities of the election period and the farandula-obsessed
mainstream press, perhaps it is time for
us to present our Colombian presidential hopefuls with a seemingly inconsequential stream of questions to prove
their worth to the nation beyond the
Zona G or El Poblado. How about we
start with the cost of a liter of milk?
Richard McColl is a freelance journalist living in Colombia. Read his articles at
www.richardmccoll.com and tune in to
his weekly podcast “Colombia Calling”
on iTunes.
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Classifieds: 607-4497
november 2013
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